Recipes so Good no-one will know you're Cheap!

Menu

Tilapia with Crusted Herb Topping

This simple bread crumb, herb and olive oil topping works well with almost all fish and takes seconds to make…the idea was “stolen” from Tyler Florence who used it on a belly of Wild Atlantic Salmon. Sorry, salmon, you’ve just turned into budget friendly Tilapia.

Tilapia with Crusted Herb Topping

It’s always hard to find decent fish at a good price in my area, and I’m always trying to find ways to work more fish into my diet – thanks to the gentle urging of my brother who’s something of a guru on health and nutrition. (He would tell you, though, to be careful of the omega 6 ratios in Tilapia, and stick with the smaller fish in the ocean.) But for me, just eating fish (What can I say? I grew up in a land locked state in a family that only served Tuna Casserole and Salmon Loaf, and that usually during Advent and Lent.) is a triumph.

I’ve noticed a lot of my friends are just picking up the frozen fillets of Tilapia for quick dinners, and decided to follow suit – and was pleasantly surprised. The herb crust kept the thin cut moist and succulent, added a wonderful flavor, crunch and texture, and I could *almost* pretend the Tilapia wasn’t there! How’s that for a fish endorsement!

I’m a little chagrined by my somewhat public admission, but I will say if you don’t have fish lovers in your family, maybe the bright, lemony, herby topping will help ease them into submission. And if you do have fish lovers? Well, what’s not to love here?

Tilapia with Crusted Herb Topping

1/2 lemon, squeeze a bit into the bread crumbs and save a bit for serving

five or six leaves of fresh basil, torn, or other herbs of your choice

1 tablespoons olive oil

Salt and Pepper to taste

Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Place one rack in the center of the oven and the other about four inches from broiler. Line a baking tray with aluminum foil (optional) and lightly spray with cooking spray. Lay the tilapia fillets out on the tray.

In a food processor or blender, pulse the garlic, add bread crumbs, salt and pepper and basil leaves together and pulse several times to once or twice. Through the shoot, add lemon and a tablespoon or two of olive oil, and pulse until the bread crumbs are coated and the basil has thoroughly mixed with the bread crumbs. (One or two pulses.)

Gently pack the most of the bread crumbs over the tilapia fillets. Lightly sprinkle the rest over the tops. (This makes the crust look a bit more attractive.) Bake at 375 degrees for 10 minutes. If not quite browned, turn on broiler, place fillets on the top rack and brown the crumbs for a moment or two, watching closely.

Use a coupon matching site! One of my favorites in my area is Pocket Your Dollars, but every store has a group of enthusiastic Coupon Matchers. Do not discount the savings! I check their site every week, even if I don’t “need” to go to the store and often find bargains I can’t pass up.

Follow my 12 Strategies – You’ll see them on the upper drop down menu of every page and how I apply them, below.

Don’t get discouraged if your prices don’t match mine! Keep shopping at the best prices and your fridge/freezer and pantry will be stocked with sales priced ingredients.

Read Strategies for additional tips as well as throughout the recipe, for saving time and managing food.

When working with any bread crumb topping, starting out with a toasted bread crumb can help speed along the browning process and is ideal for items that spend short time periods in the oven: Casseroles, boneless chicken breasts and fish are a few things that come to mind.

Mixing the crumbs first with Olive Oil (or perhaps butter in certain cases) also helps promote gorgeous browning and crunch and works out so much better than adding crumbs, spraying them with cooking spray and hoping for something that looks and tastes good.

Save a bit of the bread crumb topping out, and gently press the crumbs onto the fish or chicken so they adhere. Sprinkle the remaining over the top, and you’ll have a beautiful crust with dimension rather than something that looks flat and contrived and you’ll find it has more crunch than if you had just simply pressed the crumbs on.